Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 23, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1851 — Page 2

INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WILLIAM J. BROWN, Editor. INDIANAPOLIS: SATURDAY EVENING, NOT. 1 1S3L. Democratic State Central Committee.

A. O PORTER, DAVID REYNOLDS. L. DUN LAP. WILLIAM H. MORRISON, A. GALL, C. O WERBE, N. BOLTON. FRANCIS KING, J. P. DRAKE. W. J. BROWN. Constractlve Milage Agnin. We intend to have no controversy with regard to the question of constructive milage to Senators. We be lieve that it is wrong; and, believing so, voted to repeal the law. We think Mr. Whittlesey, the Comptroller of the Treasury, decided correctly, when, two y.ars ago, he refused to allow the Secretary of the Senate credit for the payn.ent of this constructive milage; and We think Reverdy Johnson, tbe Whig Attorney General, : decided wrong, when he overruled tbe decision of Mr. ! Whittlesey, and gave a long and labored opinion in favor of such payments. This decision, made by a Whig officor of the Government, stands as tbe law of the land, and all accounting officers are governed by i rul. s. ' , , w ,. ., . . , j Mr. Gregg, jf t!ie Madison Tribune, falls into an error, , when he sava it was first brought into practice by Mr. ' Dal that lai dent, leaving the legal question to the decision of the ; -r s o the - ry. is m me accounting and law offcers of the treasury moialitv of the Question, we think if publio officers take no more fees than tbe law gives them, there is no danger of indictments for extortion, and there should be no cause for complaint. This milage, under the decision . of the Attorney General, is the vested right of tbe Sen-

las, in The pay-rolls ol tne senate win snow wo.., .. B..nS u.. w,,cu - an who shall dare to give emPlovment or show kindness . . . . ... . i into lha Island ol f.iand Canai v bv the hs ling vessels l: in i.i i ..i .: .i .. . r.u

ansa navments had a ways been roaüe, under mat r , . . ' V r; ru "uowouiu o a isviau, no woum ioi,w 1 inj iiiiiiu iin 4 . . , j . ... , ur!,ih fii.rinoiif I in Wntprn I rust ii Alrl;a. 1 no Der- . .i .i. . r .l-

. , , . .. r . i L . . . . - , i. "wiuist as inc arc rcnreseiueu oy uio vnincnesoi ims r, prior to 1845; that in 1845, the question of the le- ,oll9 , tLe j.,Rl.d devoted to this tratfic, numbering ; nn1tnn1 Whnwnnld R.-mUU. ... - -

gality of such paymcnU was first brought op, on the about eighteen hundred, have almost all perished as , u ,,,, j iy this nHtion? None but meMI) H,u. doubt suggested bv Mr. Dallas, as to tbe propriety of! remain only enough to man a smge vessel Ac- cowaru,y Uaitof to God and humanity. ..a. !!:.. Ja .i..' hJ .dv ... ! crd,? tJ ..A11," "Dear friend, do strik off the above 'extract, in a

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' J , 71. i- l V l l V-"l tract, with nmng comments, an.l scatter them all over ment for a day. but finally concluded to follow prece- a deathly pest which carries onT tho inhabitants, the : EllP - trll. .nP-vin r ,i, rhri.tinitv nn,l n.

ator, and to re tine that which the law gave him. would . ' ,J f . 1 .. .. , , ' Zm , hi 1 ry to state that in two months six thousand persona ; Anderson, Indianapolis and Terrc Haufo. At Winchesbe a smill business. Hence, we repeat, that all these Ad in the citv of Las Palmas, and sixteen thousand in i .. ..... -' . . . - - ,,.

rafnvlnir .nithrt wlinM mmM are public, will, no doubt, yet receive their 'milage, wl.ich stands to their credit on the books of the treasury. Departed this Life, At 12 o'clock, on the evening of October 31st, 1331, the j OU Constitution e the Mate of Indian, aged thirty-five years, four months, and eleven days. The deceased died from a severe blow received last August, produced by a

spirit of radical reform which pervaded the land. Over . Brothers of Charity and the youths or the hosptcio, imi- , , , .1 r i tating this hero, who has acquired eternal glory, and twenty-seven thousand mourners attended the funeral. appoar, a messenger of the Most High, lent all and among them a host of tho f. und of the P or I Uie;r efforts to assist the afflicted. African." Strange to sav, that tbe last dving note of j At the latest dates. August 12th. the epidemic abated . , . . considerably in the city, though it still raged in the it-. rfuiii.m An had wari!.lv paed. whirl, numerous ' ' O

oaths were uttered hymen "high in authority." For the blessings which our people have received du. ing tbe life-time of the deceased, all should exclaim: "Peace ;o its ashes! Let us hope for the future!" EG v. Wright, wo believe, subscribed $1.000 toward establishing an agricultural nrofesorshn in Greencastle college, provided alnnit nine other like sums eouid be raised. Fountain Ledger. This is '.rue, Mr. Ledger, and occurred s' me five years since. Tbe professorship was to have been called after the lamented Howard, one of the best men of the nation and the warm and devoted friend of Agricultural education. We hope the scheme as originally proposed by Gov. Wright and others, may yet be carried out, and that similar professorships will be established in all the colleg' s of the State. Such a department would be peculiarly appropriate in the Statu University. Virginia. The defeat ol Hon. Henry Bdinger in the Harper's Ferry District, a district heretofore decidedly demo. eratic, was caused by Mr. Bedingcr's refusal to endorse I the compromise measures. After hit nomination bo ad- J 'sweated lhe abstract right of Stat secession, and condemned some of the compromise measures. This cruise I Induced Richard Byrd, Esq. of Winchester, to announce himself a candidate, wbo, after canvassing the district for time, declined leaving the field to Bedinger, and tner, the Independent Whig. Many Union Dcmoerats refused to support Mr Bedinger, and the resu t j was his defeat. A result over which we have no ters to shed j "Kostnth and Cotton. Under this title, Henry Ward Beecher, (says the New York Tribnne.) in the I ideye-dtnt " caustically depic s ; the absurdity, if njt bypocri.-y, of pretending t. lienor the champions of Liberty in other lands, while upholding Slavery, and such acts as the Fugitive Slave Law, in our own." Now, with doe deference to this Reverend gentleman , we think he would le better answering the designs of bis high mission, if he were to give more attention to his Bible, and less to politics; more to the cor.veision o sinners, and less to ' Kossuth and Cotton;" more to spi ritual, and less to temporal affairs The apidly ber last o" urn it inuu'iiu ior luu um. 11c cm, r rom me i scattered character of our population, and tho want of nil excitement in the election, it is probable that at least one-fourth of tbe voters did not attend tbe polls, so that there is little doubt that the Stataontains at least forty thousand voters. Webster would make a good President, but a Tery poor candidate. Lafayette Journal. C o. Cass, ditto there's two of 'em. Ind. States, man. Wo cannot see what advantage is to result to Gen. Lane by this continued abuse of Gen. Cass by oertain iree-.ou journal., wno, just now. tor reason, mat arc -i : i - .. . well understood, claim to be t o particular innH nf Gen. Lane. u Sart mt from my friend," shoold be the prayer of the old hero. Kentaeky. It is .aid that John J. Crittenden, Mr. Fillmore's Atmay Ganaral, will t elected to tbe Senate in the ' torney plM of Mr. Underwood, whose term expires on tbe tha 4th of Maren, 1852. JUt desert a sinking ship. Ohio Election. CtScial retnrns have been received from all tbe State except thirteen counties. Governor Wood's majority cd. will be between twenty-flve and thirty thousand. Ohio. The Cincinnati Enquirer thinks thu Democratic ma- i Jority in Ohio, over the combined vote of Wbi and Ab-' ohtioaists, is about ten thousand. Michigan. The election of State Officers takes place next Tuesday. We shall be ready to crow for tbe success of our old foend Bob IMMW, tbe Democratic candidate for i G ivernor. Robert can't be beat 17 A public Dinner and free Barbecue will be given so Gen. Lane on to-day, at tbe residence of Charles Koowles, on the Railroad ten miles north of Evaae. liver Mine. A silver mine has t n found on the farm of Mr. Do. re, ia Bracken county, Ky., and is yielding a reh harvest to the person workiag it

i . i i I w w . . w h i a i . i y usiit ej sftMU U.'I OIUI V UwllJlL.I U L IUS l I U V uss wivsvvii'sim s! ivt , oiiu i o o u u - Il TIS r. L Xptll. in the State, that it may startle tbem U a sense of their cribe $15,000 more stock to the L. Si II. M. Railroad, j "d -P. B,l,le Af,er th;,r J " Tcxas Is ?. , . w , - L. " rvi- ,T. ' . . . s. . J " to-morrow they will carry a spaneand that's what

recent election thows very clearly that Texas is crept in among us. and are now 'raising I hair rile heads 1 This road is gaining friends . apidly all along the line, I .he.V Wpl ht'

gaining in popu'ation. The increase in tbe num. ' our very midst exciting unfavorablo commotion and and the work of grading, bridging and preparing the " " "! " "f', TJ.- .-1. t I

of vote. already rcpo,t d, as having been cast at the : STSXS C ZuXEtV? L!Z ljJtffSfL I in the sunras'if they took pains o tell the wor.d

election, say. the Civilian, indicates a vote of at dr.lwn by the con,ciousnes. of our great ascendency in ! wharf' within a few day..-Lorec6rg Prose. ""PJ

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The Plague In the Canary Islauds. The Havana correspondent nf the New Orleans Pica yune, sends the following account of the terrible mortal ity prevailing at the Canary IIands, and which is sup

posed to be the plague. It is terriiic beyond measure, ad the people of Havana are fearful that it will be brought to that city by the slave-dealers: History does not record anything so sad as the spec tacle which the Island of Grand Canary has presented, and still presents. The b.-si directed peu attempt in vain to relate such misfortunes and horrors, and Words would not be sufficient to d-pict tbeii intensity. The epidemic now ragvd with such fury tnat the inhabitants in consternation abandoned the town, without caring for anything but their pet sons, to such an extent that they even forgot the ties of blood . Death surprised then in the mitist of tiieir flight, sc that the roads were covered with corpses, over which not a tear of friendship, or of filial or fraternal love, was shed, becauae terror had smothered every sentiment except that of sell'j preservation preservation. As was to be expected, the fugitives, carrying with thcui the fatal germ, infected (he coun. try,' which became the tbeatie of the most horrible scenes. The beasts, abandoned in the city, perished for want of food, and the decomposition ol their botfie, togetner with those of the human corpses which remained uuburiej ia tüÄ Creels, vitiated the atmosphere to such an extent that any unfortunate person who might return to the city fell dead almost as soon as he entered a house. 1 However, this new Contretempt was stopped as soon as possible by the energetic measures lasen by the wormy Military Governor, and ly the humanity of the Second Alcalde of the Corregidor, and various young men, many of whom tell victims to their heroism. ' . . ilion WM co that the epide mtc vrs not the cholera, but the terrible plague of ihr natality being so great that corpses are strewn upon th0 earlh ,n ,DcrLtdlbl R"r ,hir , Uon a.jgmcllts tbe influence ol the corrupted atmoshara . .. ' - .i as. soon as t lie tommauuant uencrai 01 me rrovtnce learned the abandonment of the city of Las Palma, he sent a portion of the garrison of thu Capital to bury the dead, but the greater portion of lhe soldiers were at. tacked by the epidemic and died. In short, in order la ! : r.L. .1 :. :.. !

, , , .,1.1. . , tii it I -u i . i . .u i l j twii win unerseci tnc ocneioniaine ivan ivoao, a .u ioie arrayed before the tho whole Island. Up to the last dates, the plague had i , . ... .

Pd ''l8'" of A2",e F"jed" 1 ne uisnop is one o rne persons in oranu unary, : who have contributed most to the alleviat Ion of Sil fit? 1"i llQf : humanity. This holy prelate and worthy pastor, with a resignation truly evangelical, displayed the utmost charity, real and interest, in behalf of the unhappy peo pie. He was, and still is, untiring in traversing the streets, opening his purse, giving spirit a i consolation, establishing a hospital in his own palace, anu in ministei ing to the unhappy victims with his own hands. The :iuntry. TfGen. Scott, when a young man, abandoned the profession of tbe Law, und entered into the service of his country as a soldier. How well he has performed his duty every man in tbe nation knows, yet are some men so lost to shame as to uisinnata that he is not a friend to the Constitution and the Union! Do they suppose the people such idiots as to believe it. Indiana Journal. Senator Seward, of New York, claims to bo a strong friend of tbe Constitution and the Union, and we have no doubt our friend Defreea regards him just as good a Union man as Gen. Scott. Removal. Sam Pike, editor of the Kentucky Flag, announces his intention to remove with the first rise of water from Maysville to Newport, opposite Cincinnati. We have no doubt, for the reasons given by Mr. Pike, that it will be a judicious move. May success attend him wherever bis tent is pitched. Portrait or Coloibcs. Major Cass, the American CLaige at Rome, has purchased from the convent f Aquaba Abruzzi Mountains, an original portrait of the immortal discoverer, Columbus. It is ef a large size, four feet by three. The Roman Government have offered a large price for it, but met with a refusal. It is to be sent forthwith to America. From the Grecnsbursb Giuuc.J Position of the Indiana Democracy. Tha timf is at hand wlion tha 11,.mu.r:.!i ..f InJi... wj taied UJK)n l)y lhe t xij-enctes of the occasion lo announce, in clear and distinct terms, what views they, a u Pn"y nü' w',', reference to tbe compromise measures which have so effectually stilled tbe turbulent ex- ! utemcnt that turcatened, and seriouslythreatened.bej fore their passage, the peace of our government. This bulwark of our nation's safety, after it has been piled up ! bf the united cncigy and efi'ort ol all patriots of ail partut. is yet to stand a shock more severe than any il has ever felt. If the great democratic party of the U.non stands lit tn and undivided in its defence, no danger need Lc apprehended , but if wc do not act in ur.ison, its beau, tiful parte will inevitably be rent asunder, and from its ruins will arise a scene of anarchy and confusion that must sicken lhe heart of the freeman and deaden the energius of the most active and patriotic statesman. And how do the Democrats of Indiana view the coming struggle I Do we stand in a solid column, bound to- ! gether by the glorious principles that actuated oui cert ! Cass in the battle of unpenetrable tc fee'. nr. of sectionality or lanati.-:sm ISo: Let the ar.jwcr be " im cin u is ume tnese unnrincipieu cisorj? n"",d receive such a rebuke as would forever shut their j ignominious, compared with which, defeat in battling for " . .... ... , , convention endorse the compromise, and at the Laliot box. ! clearly stated principles wr.uld l.e nlorious No lot th the clear heads and boncst hearts of true democrats will . sustain it. I Democrats of Decatur, you have an influence which should be exerted towards setting thing, right in In.lt- . Remember that mall M that influence may be, I ii Z tfrow" ,D lfh?. ngbt d,rec,l1n. lU orca wJ be ,. , f t , -- felt, and perhaps felt to a great advantage for eood. If - -' a ! you Mud men to the convention who y on know consider . i , ' . 7 the oompromise a final settlement of tbo tiresome, expensive and dangerous, slavery agitation, they will unite . mt their voices in condemnation of those traitor, who are ! ir.wng to resurrect tne spirit ot the u.sarjection which was L'tii led when the comoromise measnres vrre adnnt Loicu wucu iue compromise measures were aaoptOut of Pain. A letter from Boston to the New Yor k Herald says, ; the result, in Ohio and Pennsylvania m inke the Whi". I . 1- .1. c . MtblBCk mnT thunder clouds the Scott ; ,mg, i mean, tor tne WEBSTza men seem to bear the , visitation with commendablefortitode. Gen. Scott's prospects bave been growing worse very fast, latterly, and these blows from two great States are regarded by many in the light of grace-strokes. Tbey pnt him out w P,n- 1 We"er wUigi are encouraged by this COn,,,l'OD f th,B-Ci- - UTA stone flagging is being laid on the floor of the portico of the Masonic Hall. An improvement worthy of imitation. B7The Kentucky Legislature will convene at Frank. fort oa Monday next. T7"P. T Rsrnmn the R-iil iren. ir t Standard savs will be nominated tor the next Governor of Connecticut bv the temperance, and alto hy the democratic party of j tbe State

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nolllltcd tonoucs or this delokivn itinir of ,Li um uenuuu unw, luuvi uh hi uuouci oj, mis: ic.iion tni uj , j..i .1. n mi n ucnu juiii. uiess -j " , I ; crilSIICi!. llUIIon meet inos mi V . IllUceo , le Itciu ai wmm

IVUI lll'lio 11. :IU LIU.ll "MM HIIinilB fill TO' In IT O 1 11.1 f I . . - . .

prove ruinous to our best interests Already have thev "At Hamburgh an experim nt has been mad..' with ;"u "," " "'" ""u l" crown, anu abolished. A splendid saloon is lormed upon the space fcouin, and lanatics at the Worm may re-enact ina dared 10 insinuate that tho democratic State convention. ! Pbilipe' Fire Annihilator. A wooden shed filled with 1 sa'J to mye,f- 1 sl,rtld kt! f. kno.w how. i formerly occupied as the pit, and arm-chair, of the most a-ene.of Chnstiana and Syracuse; but ihev can aeMM , which mee.s on the 24ih of February next, should no combustibles was set on fire, and an attempt was made j '"any of von will remember you're christians till next j inconvenient 1 L'V lhe 171 "f "nV lWr',on f tb I endorse the compromise! This would indeed leäve our i t the machine at work ; but he heat was too great weck' How many of -vou 2 to morrow mrrning to e egant kind take the place of tbe former inconvenient, e Re!lUss ,piriUi disappinted aspirants, and party in a beautiful predicament. After the national to peimit of approach. A fireman was near becoming Joar offic" a,nd oo'inting-honses and stand ehlnd yonr ( disagreeable seats. : hn ken down politicians will always exist ; but their in. democraey has built up and sustained for s. lon a timo ! MM1 of the experiment, and at last it was found ne- ' " m the way of business all to scram. , ft u ramoreJ lliat Kunkel's Nightingale Opera Troupe , SMMi ' wanin2. and themselves finding the oblithis great adjustment, shall Indiana now dodtho re- ! ceary to nso a common water engine, which ex'.in. ,,le DP "j0 i-01" f"r?e you are miserable sinners, while . ' vion and contempt they desei ve. sponsibility of lending a hand ii VphM it ihrVX the ! wS3 the flames in tea minutes. ' every other thing you do may make yourself more mis- j open ,t under the auspices of the propnetor, Mr , prJt nf ,e m in coming etisis? Never! Theso measures are a part of erable, only you never feel it, so long as it make, you Bate., and that they will appear loth in concert and j t,rjr adherence t the Union. For it they are willing the democratic creed, and we will never falter in the de- ! A large and commodious railroad depot is being rieh? And so there's a S tnday conscience like a ! opera. Nothing could be more attractive than such an to ' conquer their prejudices." and give up their sec i fence of our principle.. Victory, won by artfully avoid- I erected in Jeflersonville. j fÄtnd ei2tti nnA Tnlv tea'r 1 entertainment. As no dramatic performances are to be j J KLSi ui TJS 'mmmTmm! in m nnvfiAn nf himh m .ör... J. ii i M coat Ami tii conc enco onrolully hy, nna only vnr Z I wih Un ai.vtlnna but it. perpetuity and onwara pro

MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 3, 1851.

Monsienr Tonson Come Again. The notorious Henry C. Wright, who twelve months 1 ago enlightened our Freesoil friends of Wayne and Heury counties, and got up so many joyous revivals at Abo lition meetings, is back to his field of labors again. He writes to a friend in England from Aboit, Allen county, Indiana, where it seems he has found some congenial friends. His subject is the Constitution ot our Slate. When tbe following extracts are read, many will wonder buw a man preaching such infamous dcirines can meet with countenance in Indiana. After , pying tbe first and tbe thirteenth articles of tbe Constitution, he says : "A more cool, deliberate, unblushing, dastardly specimen of lying and hypocrisy cannot he iound in the history of mankind, ! hau is exhibited by the citizens of In. diana in their new Constitution. It is perfectly worthy and in keeping with the 'United States of Ameriem' as a lave-bieeder, a slave-driver, a slave-trader, and a slaveholder, in the middle of the nineteenth century. No orhci period of tue world could have so formally prac tised such hypocrisy; no other nation could navo been ! corrupted to utter a lie so huge, so shameless 'Then, for tbe privilege of doing these things, for tbe right to perpetrate this meanness, this lying and hypocrisy , tbey devoutly thank God ; they pour out their gratitude to the Almighty. As the pirate falls on his knees over bis victim, and thanks God for enabling him j to cut so many throats with so little bjirm to himself, so the Christians and patriots of Indiana bless and praise , tneir God tor giving them grace to brand any man with infamy who has a daik skin ; and to punish, as felons. l,j.,t.m of America. Thine, HENRY C. WRIGHT." New Trlegrnpb Line. We are informed by Mr. Chapin, of the O'Rielly Telegraph, that a cw line is in course of construction, and will be finished in a short time from Dayton to St. Louis, k .V.. f rU.: Wi..,.!,. t..- f. low the line of that road to this place The construetion ol this telegraph lino will ensure to t no citizen ol p.n,Pi In.i:..n tu., linna tif frm mil ntis t in vrifh the, S , 14 S t I IIUIUIIW V W 1 V. visa kl.i' - - ' . east ky separate wires, at all times. Mr. C. will leave this city to-day for Winchester and intermediate points to solicit stock subscriptions. Sufficient stock has a). ready been secured to build the line from Terre Hiute to St. Louis. When this and the Madison lino is finished, we shall bave four lines diverging from Indianapolis. ETWe learn from the Prcsideat of the Bellefontaine R. R. company, that tho low waters of the Ohio, have kept back the iron to so lato a period in the season, that the interest of the company will induce him to suspend track laying on the road at Chesterfield for the winter, to he resumed as soon in the spring as th3 ground may be sufficiently settled. This we understand will not effect the time of the final completion of the work, as the iron will be laid to Muncie before the bridge over White river, and the embankments there, can he completed in the spring, so that Chesterfield, fifty. two miles from our city, will be tbe head of the line during the winter, to which point the cars will run daily, except Sundays. E7-The Postmaster General established the following .... . . , ,. , ost Offices in Indiana, during the week ending October 25: Kilmore, Clinton co., J. P. Wright, P. M.; Salisi n i Ma. n st . set. t I UUry' , - , ' -T - - , ' . ' ' ' T co.. uavia Decs:, r. MKJ vra.poie, nancoc co., e. : phas Foit, P. M.; Olio, Hamilton co., John Helm, P. jj Vnv n.vTha Harrodshnrr, tKv 1 PIomctIhW .- ' - ft J ' - J says the drought has been so excessive in Grant county that it has dried up all the cows! At least such was tbe apology of a tavern-keeper for placing no milk or butter on the table. I7"M idame Anna Bishop, a much sweater vocalist , - - . , . i i than Jenny Lmd, though possessing a less powerful voice thin tho " Swdiseb Nightingale," is to sirgthis evening in Pittsburgh. She is to visit Lexington, Ky., the last of this month also, Madisoa. Why not visit Indianapolis? DThe General Assembly or Vermont, a Jsw days since, elected the following gentlemen Judges in the the State, viz: Robert Pierpont, Jacob Collamer, Asa- I hel Pcck nd Luko P- P')llaiu' p, o . 6" Messrs. Gibson, Black, Lewis, Lowrie, deme. crats, and Coulter, whig, have been elected Judges of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Tbe latter by 4,197 majority over Campbell. (CT"The Cleveland Herald, tho day after the election, took down the name of General Scott which it had borne at the head of iu columns during the canvass. Enough on that head. O'-R RAlLaoAD O 1 last Saturday the voters of , . 1 ' 1 Ftat AnntiulaToh. The German correspondent of (tyTho Bridge over Pogue's Run, on Meridian street, " b,inC rePired in a uhtantial manner. The Jenny Lind Coucert in Cincinnati. Tbe Enquirer says: gtanding the inclemency of the weather, was a very f,hionable one. Tbe crowd was not dense, a number " The assemblage on Wednesday evening, notwithlasuiunauie one. i ue cruwu was not ueuse, a numucr L .u t. u. u; i.. ,h. MTjeakM mi "r5 aw s wits wbiuj: ov, mu nu uo v WM an objection to the comfort of those wbo were was noi in uojecwi present ' jfj Lind looke j.wm iyiuu iwn,vi uivio iiulivshu vsscass " ijv ii ae heard hfr in lhe city. Her .ummer rest seem, to have .4 Ma intars' I inn t bun ir Vinn er a r . f imnmv,d her much Po.siblV il was the imonlse of our ! , . . . , . ' . r , i fnCr. hut wo imasrined that sh? sani? more sweetly I I J ' . , i than then, with more power, clearness, melody and patho.. She won the admiration of ber auditory, ml. j if we could read tbem aright, in their estimation stood ln ",e eropiro m idusic im tto..i.i y""- , . oeueiii perjormra a soio on wie oiai wiin ovu iiji ..Inn. . Ir i 1 1 C. ih. .MtA.I r.F iwiVArfill tannr Ve.'0 mini) I. b " vv vi ivnvii.i ivii'.i. red bis heareis with two at least of his la'riy cnrapiu songs. Burke discoursed in the rieb notes ol ni. violin, and Guldsobmidt ualled down praises from tbe amateurs by bis skilful performance upon the piano." XTThe ; cL'ng girl, tried for killing ber infant brother in Providence, has been acquitted on the ground of insanity. It appear, that the accused was used a. a "medium" in tnat gross imposition called tbe spirit rappings, and that she had a full knowledge of tbe deception practiced in this respect. She would prophesy that tbe spirit, would carry ofl a nulT box, and then hide it herself to make it appear to be the truth. And tricks like that were wofTdered at by gaping fanatics, and pious bigots grew heaven-inspired with such messages ol wisdom from the spirit world Ctn Enquirer. TMI LatI Stobm Intelligence has been received in Si. Johns, N Brunswick, of the loss nf fifty British fishing vessels in tbe late storm, and the probable de- ! tra ctioo of ornr oqo buadred lives

Pennsylvania Election. GUBERNATORIAL VOTE OCTOBER. 1851.

Whig. Dem. Wl.i f Dein ' Counties. Johnston BigUr. Counties. Johnston Big t er Adams 2472 1945 Lawrence 2187 H'79 Allegheny 8797 Armstrong 2181 Beaver 196$ Bradford 3650 Berks 4721 Bedlor. 223J Buck- 5268 Butler 27S2 Blair 2)j 59 i Lebanon 2924 2472 Lehigh 30I5 1J96 Lycoming 2027 3688 Luzerne 3471 M'Kcan 409 2202 Mercer 2673 54S3 Mifiim 1413 2536 Monroe 423 1704 Montgomery. . .4941 1765 Montour 876 1374 Northampton. .2627 2J74 Not lliumberland 1634 5350 Perry 1430 265S Pnilad. City 542 jqjy 3392 2675 46 1 27G0 lb'73 2107 5742 1394 4150 Cambria. ...1230 ... 787 ...183 ...6350 . . 13U'J ... 962 ... 981 ...1024 . . .2933 . . 2959 . ..3699 ...2147 1 j4 ...3610 . . .2626 ...372 ... 706 ...1272 ...2435 ..2510 ...1002 ...1143 i Carbon . Centre. 2549 Chester Clarion Clearfield. . . Clinton Columbia. . . Ciawfoid. .. Cumberland. Dauphin. . . . Delaware. . . Elk Erie Payette Franklin. . . . Fulton Greene Huntingdon. Indiana JefTiTsOn. . . . 2237 5255 b is Philad. County I621S lb4b 1266 P.Le lbJ odo 2041 Potter. . 631 4069 .2739 .2123 . 227 .1463 .2M7 .1142 .1137 .4042 . 1040 574 4743 1069 215 458 2036 1947 16 1242 3915 3192 S-huylkill... 3 141 Somerset . . . 2690 bVamathaaaa 1594 Sullivan 465 Tioga 2106 Union 3179 Venango.... 3236 Warren 840 Washington . 2250 Wttvne 21 2 2024 Westmoreland. 3 105 1752 Wyoming 913 1246 Yo'ik 4727 1337 5140 1136 573 j Juniata. Lancaster 11064 6226 1 Total. . .178070 186507 17070 Biglcr's majority in the State S-137 LT The result in Georgia is among the most gratifyit. ÄS If Mlllim r it ninf in inn hi- n t it,,.al rirnli .,1 ing, as it among the most significant, political events ol the day. Mr. Cobb, who is now elected Governor by the unprecedented majority, in that State, of nearly twenty thou- , j sand, was one of the earliest and most efficient, as well j as able ami lent less ol the advocates of the Compromise in the last Congress. He was foremost in the House of Representatives in ms eiiorts to hnng about the adjustment of thu irritating and dangerous questions which agitated the nation. His intrepid and resolute course drew upon him the bitter enmity, not merely of ultraists at the North, but or ultraists at home. The seetsoaadism ot both extremes ol the confederacy, with scarcolv less virulence at the South than at the North, clamored for its revenge upon the man who had borne so conspicuous a part in the great work of pai-irtcation Mr. Cobb sought his justification in a direct appeal to the people of Georgia. Ho was presented, distinctly, ! as a champion ol the Compromise and the (Jeina, n ! against Seeessionisin and Disnuion. North and South, v., vas in tlmtSn ,.,,, iLr use v..r iltiflcil t&'ilh mnrA vrrr un, animatinn - i f 1. ai.fs. ' 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 1 t 1 I II S St 'III 91M' C No effort was omitted to defeat Mr. Cobb, atid to procure a popular verdict against him and the measures of which he was the exponent, by the enemies of loth. Wow triumphantly both have come out ol the contest, - i now matter of history. Never was the public voice more emphatically expressed. N ver WMSseetionalim, in the form which tho infection takes in that quarter, more aignally rebuked and reprobated. Georgii certainly has done more than could reasonably have haM expected or hoped for, towards putting down her domestic agitators. It remains fur the North to do equal justice to its branch of the allied disturbers of the public tranquility. Pennsylvania has already spoken out. New York, we trust and believe, will in turn respond to Pennsylvania. Tli.st State after State, at the North, will contribute t enforce and impress the lesson which the reult in Georgia 'caches, the signs of the times clearly indicate. Albany Jlrous. Character of Col. Davis. A correspondent of the Pittsburgh Gazette gives the following sketch of Col. Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi. From our previous information we presume it is BM overdrawn: "The news from Mississippi is conflicting. After the newspapers had teemed for a week with announcements that Col. Jefferson Davis had declined the nomination for ; Governor, tendered him by the Secession party, we have an apparently authentic statement that he has accepted , it u,aed an dress to tbe people of the State, and rej signed his sei-t in the Senate of the United States, to ! which n was nnnointed onlv last Kitrinrr to o full form of I six years. There are many contradictory point, in the ,,,,,, of C.l. Davis. He is a gallant soldier, yet in j his private deportment he is one of the vainest and most i disagreeable ol men. He possesses learning, areat eloJ quence and ingenuity in debate, and many of those qua!- ' itie which are accustomed ... The applause ot listening aensies io toramina," yet he "ft en violates tbe comities of senatorial and gen i tlemanly intercourse. He is desperately ambitious, but this trait is tempered and contrasted by a disinterested ness most remarkable in a publio man of this country, or, indeed, of any country. Just aftei the fame of his conduct at Btiena Vista had come to the knowledge ol r n o. i .r i u: .t . .r -- nesiueni rum. uc unt-rei min nie ptisi i uiiirsincr Gena, h. ,;ne &f ,he ReS(lar Armv, a promotion and distinction dear to evjry man brought up, as Colonel Davis had been, to ihe profession or arms. But he declined it on the plea that be bad lieen opposed upon principle to conferring those appointments in the line upon civilians or volunteers, to the prejudice of the regular officer. Ar.d now, it appears, with the certainty of defeat Issfore bim, at the eleventh hour of the contest, he assumes the leadership of a falling party, and deliberateh nlMndon, hi. coveted position in the BM august an. poweriui leisiaiivo ihhij in hid wiuni. ms is a innaii eism which has something of the heroism about it, though fraught with innumerable mischiefs and evils to any commuriity which may be so unfortunate as to be misled by it. Chnrch Goers "Bless you! I've thought of it many a time when I've 6cen a church emptying its If into the street. Look here, now, I'll suppose there's a crowd of people a whole mob of 'em going down the chnrch steps. And at the church door there is I don't know how many roods of christian carriages, with griffins painted on the pounds, and swords, und daggers, and battle axes, thnt, as well asi I can remember, Jci is doesn t recommend no. ' . i sw n-.o-ep mm m - ing to look rcl'gious. nnd there's footmen following some. 1 1 .1 - 1 Lir..i Iwith no thought whatsoever, only that it's Sunday ; church going day! And so they put on what they think em once a week. Well, to think how manv such folks I go to worship why, then I must say it. Master Cap- j stick, to stand inside of a church and watch a congrega. : tion coming out, however von may stare, mar be I j . u i n r v . . - . 3 ' , i can't help, after my fashion, thinking so a melancholy I ight indeel. Lord love yon, when we see what Mime ' people do all the week people who're staunch at chnrch. rememoer-. cant neip tnm.inff mere a goo, many poor sruils who're onlv christians at morning and after- j noon service." St. James and St. Giles. Naval. List of 0 fleers reported for the U. 6. ship St. Lawrence; Lieutenants Lawrence Pennington, John A. Winslow. Thomas M Brusher. Madison Rush. mZl n uTlmTTiTL ' .7 7 V . i. Master Edward P. Colhouse. Purser John A. Bates. ourgeon Mcmnmin n. l insiar. ratseu Assistant o 5 ur J u.: a d..j..i uri:cun iu. X,. limiin. AM'.mi'i oii ivnun"i lull Harrison Chnlin John W Orinr Pasted Mid. .hi fifore W.Young. Midshipmen-George n ' n...bri R T.vinr Tm. Rr.l h Pr. Iben, John W. Lunnui"ton. Boatswain John Bates Gunner James M. Cooper. Carrenter Win. D. Jenkins. Sailmaker John G. Galliger. Captain Bladen Dulany has been ordered the command of the ship, but has not yet reported. The St. Lawrence carries fifty guns and is in a beautiful condition. Sbe is all ready for sea. Destination on the Pacific Ocean. New York Mirror. CASi and Seward. A gentleman jnst from Miehi- ! gan inform, us, that when Senator Seward went recently to that State to defend the notorious conspirators Gen. Cass met him and pleasantly remarked "Now, I Mr. Seward, don't preach any of your higher law doo, trines here; if you do, I shall preach new and canfw ; lion Lou. Journal. CT A soldier . many years ago, wa. .cntenced to have hi, er cut off Aft..r umlerenine-the brutal nrdml. be was escorted out of the court yard the roge'. march, j mU 'm ... .i. .... ....... He then turned and tn mock dignity tuns aoatesseu tne . m n a . a - l f mnsieians. " Uentiemen, tuank ynu: nut i nave noiur ther need of your services, fsr I bave no ear for music now

TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 4, 1831.

Land Warraut. Henry Trassier can have a land warrant for 40 acres f , , - . .u:. ...T,.... 1 ta"u u J win.; ab bill uiuw. Election. The general elections in Louisiana and mmsMMMB took place yesterday ; those in New York, New Jersey Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois', take place to-day ; and ! Maryland to-morrow. We shall soon have plenty ofi eection news. M;re Democratic victories to record a ; tn,n? which has become so common, so much a matter of course, that it has lost much of its interest. A Whig victory once in a while, would give greater vari.;y. Can't wo have one or two? Afraid we shall have to wait for Vermont. The Pern and Indianapolis Railroad Compa ny, vs. The Newcastle nud Richmond Railroad Company. This suit came up before the Tipton Circuit Court at its session during the last month. The Peru and Indianapolis Railroad Company had filed .i ti i i -i ir in: ' . .. r I uicu in in ioc m..... .i. ' j the Newcastle and Richmond Company were aU.ut to run their road Tor a long distance nearly parallel with the Peru road, and thus interfere with their business, and afterwards to cross the track, within some 16 or 18 miles of its northern end, thus interfering with their right of way, and otherwise violating the privileges and franchise granted them hy their charter. The Dill was filed upon the fuith of that section of the p u hj h , j?e, them a eSt.U8jre - privilege, and guaranties exemption from interference by " ; other roads." Judge Biddle, the President Judge of the Howan Circuit Court, bein a stockholder in the Newcastle road, held bimsrlf interested, and for that purpose dcc'ined acting, and therefore ordered the cause transferred to the adjoining Circuit and county of Tipton. Upon the filing of lhe Bill in the Tipton Court, in pursuance 0f this transfer, tho complainants moved the Associate ,, ., ... Jud"fat county in vacation for an injunction against the delendants, which was awarded, and thus the case stood at the opening of the Tipton Circuit Court Th defendants, by their solicitors, moved the court to I naaaahw th Bill, upon the ground that it wal illegally transferred to the Tipton Circuit Court. This motion the Court overruled. The def-ndants then moved to dissolve the injunction, upon the ground that the Associate Judges of Tipton county had no authority to issue it. The Court overruled the motion on tha point, but sustained it on the ground that the notice to the defendants of the application for lhe suit, was insufficient. The motion to dis lvc the injunction was therefore sustain"d. but the Court, immediately upon dissolving it. made an interlocutory order, again enjoining the defendants until Km final determination of the cause. T'je defendants then appealed from the last injunction, but after consultation, withdrew the appeal, made a general appearance in tho cause, and demurred to the Bill. This last step brought the whole case before the Court , ,. , , , upon its merits, and thereupon it was fully argued, and the Court overruled the demurrer, sustained the Bill of the complainants and decreed that the injunction lie made perpetual, and also rendered a decree for costs against the defendants. This final decree was not made until the defendants had refused to withdraw their demurrer. and refused to answer the Bill, or ask time for that purpose, their object being to carry the case to the Supreme Court as it then stood. They cordingly prayed an appeal, which was granted, and the " will therefore come before the wxt Supreme Court for decision. . i Good Reading. The Whig and Abolition papers are cackling over the discovery of what they think is a mare's nest . They have now the evidence that the Editor of the ' State Sentinel'' i a Frecsoiler, and lhe proof is in the Maarjag extiact of a letter written from Washington City shortly afier " ' be was defeated for Speaker: ul had rather been defeated, nith the vote I received, than to have been elected under a pledge M pack the committees for the benefit of the slaveholding imerest of the South. But the time has come when the North will no longer bow the neck to tte slaveocracy ot the South, I am done. She cannot be satisfied with a imileratc und conservative support, but you must become the defender of her institutions. If you d ubt or falter, you ate denounced as a traitor, and with a lordly arrogance yon are told that they will dissolve the Un on. Their course of conduct has lully determined me never again to lie a candidate for Congress.'7 State Sentinel. Uee. 22. lljy. i I Im. n ti nt nnn ll'or.l in fill. ..I..O.-A nvlr.fti lli.t i I wo wouId change or alter. It was written in a time of i high excitement, when the Freesoilers of the North were attempting to force upon Congress lhe Wilmot Proviso and the California Bill, without any settlement or concession beneficial to tbe South. The Southern men were at that moment training their band and holding their caucuses, and threatening resistance and disunion. Members of Congress were arming themselves with deadly weapons for self-defence. If tho whole letter, and all our other letters, were published entire, some very hard I ... - . . . . .... sentences would be Iound against the northern Abolition- . . n ti . . j i r . , . 1 m . . , .. . ing mailer in tnosc letters, anu ,v u.u ..oi a u-ue egotistical we should republish tbem for the purpose o general circulation ET The old Olympic Theatre, says the Cincinnati Enquirer, is undergoing such improvements as is destined to make it one of the most popular places of resort in citizens to be extremely popular. , - ,,, St. Locis Breweries There are twenty-ctght esje tablishinents in Si. Louis for tbe manufacture of malt Iiqaora. Five of ihe principal breweries last year conrf J20.000 bushels of barley and l.a.lev malt ...... Tho entire consump ion of barley by the breweries, for , iwi t. K-i- -- Lir r ,000 bushels, one.half of which m vr T til the year 1S50, was 400 was imported from Western New York, Kentucky and j Ohio. The consumption of hops during tbe same time reach 800 bales. Sontao comiko to America. The Boston Bee ha. p.ft.ntlu rfi'pivml infurni.ttnll a'hii-h ennfirms the rumor i that Countes. Henrietta Son tag Rossi will make a n.u- j . . . , , ... , . . sical tonr through the United State, during the next j season, commencing in August. She will be accom- j I panied by a distinguished tenor, and by Liszt, the grc.-.t pianist, and Ernst, the famous violinist. KTThe Ctitcinnat Nonpareil understands that witnesses are being subpecned to go before tbe Supreme Court of the United States, to be holden in Columbus, Tor tbe purpose of endeavoring to indict those persons who were enace1 in petting np , , ... " , . ' The case will come before his Hr the Cuban expedition. onor Judge MeLean. This trial will elicit considerable interest, and the resnlt will be looked for with anxiety. . " ' . . i OThe Ufiea fW. 1 .) uazette .tare, met a ui. .e boy and girl, the first eight and the other five years of, J m ... , . I age, arrived in Utioa a day or two since, having come from Ireland alone. They had been aent for by their j mother, who resides ia the above city.

.UoA.l in tbiM l.rsll is- Haciinni vm.mnr riinf'fii"f (T.iinrr :

'1.11 t ( J is Sill HUH , I I I Ul.filUWU lJ v v- v""

Virginia. The delegation ia Virgiaia stands tbe same as ia the j lat Congress thirteen Democrats and two Whigs.

This is better, by two members, than we expected. The aggregate majority, in tbe Congressional elections, shows a large Democratic majority in the State, which secures the eiert ion of Col Joe Johnson for Governor. f ff ITfa 1 TlThT John S. Mills. n, R. K M ade, T. H. Averett, T. S. Bocock, P. Powell, J. 8. Caskie, T. H. Bayley, A. R. Holliday, J. F. Strotker, C J. Fmrnlkmr, John Letcher, H. R. Edmonson, Fayette M'MuIlea, J. M. H Beale, George W. Thompson. Messrs. Thompson, Letcher, Faulkner, Srrother and Caskie, are new members. The others ware members of tbe last Congress. Messrs. Bayley. Edmonson, M'Mullen and Beale, voted for the Compromise measures; the others against them. (T'The Havana Consulate, as the returns show, ia worth only from seven to eight thousand dollars a year, i rraB mcini mol,iments General Campbell, in tha ,aM vaf of Hf ser, rcCejvod bm fcix thousand. It is hardly an adequate compensation, considering tbe expenses ol the position. Even the best consulate that wa , . ave abroaJ( lha, of worth bm , thoB ' sand dollars a year and the actual office expense of ; je ConMli are five thousand 0The Daily Wabash Express is discontinued. Mr. Dannlson, the proprietor, will continue the publicatoo I - ! of lhe cekly. Messrs. Soole and Brown, tbe Jther I m 1 ! . I J Wt. .a partners have withdrawn. The Sotile has departed. I and t e lifeless body is to be resureeted in another and more impoeiny farm by its original proprietor. Pit t-osopiiicAL. The editor of the Enston Argus, Mr. W. H. flutter, was defeated for the Lgislaiure ia Northampton county by a whig opponent; whereupon, Mr. H. lniefly announces: The question was submitted to the people of Nor. thampton county, on Tuesday, whether they would have a iih! representative or a gMd edit .r. th'i-omine winter, and they decided by a majority of HQ that fhey would rather have a good editor. Huzza for our side '" UTA dry good store was robbed at Dresden on the Ohio Canal, a few deys since. The robber being close, ly cornered, ent the goods laek tm the store with a po. lite note requesting lb own a t take them back, as he found them i arked so higu that he could not sell them so as to make any profit on them! LKunkfl's Nightingale Ethiopian Opers Troupe, of Philadelphia, one of lhe ItCSt liands that rvrr visited tbe West, are now singing t large audiences evety evening at the Masonic Hall, in ImlianaMlis. They will continue their concerts on Thuisday and Fiiday evrnin ;s. Our couutiy readers should come in and hear tbem. Senntor Bricht. We clip the following from the last number of tbe Pennss lvanian ; " We are gratified to state, on the authority of a tel. nP-..i.;.. - - -- ..r ij v... r I m l 1.0.... .. ... in...... ,. . i.r- itll W' . LJ . j Bri,lt, ,.t on F.i.lv last that "gentleman was sMM from his n mm e a' Madison, Ia., on business, and bad fully recovered In m his late MMfsarawj illness. In tl ese days, when goil men are scarce, ami when lhe com tiy desires the support of every bold and brave citizen ;. its lorilcrs, such a citizen as Blight could il J be spared from the nutional councils." Exclusion of Negroes from the Free State. Tin ftiiPkf inn rf v t- ml i n r nprrriw-fc fn.m tVi fr fiiii.a I a IstyMMag to be seriously agitated in New Y -ik and j elsewhere. The outrages committed by m gioes mud their abolition allies, ttiot o late have Income so I'rcqueut in dilTcreut States, has cause! many of the s .o- r reflect. ing men of all parties, to think seriously of adopting some other mode of gettiug rid of these wars tha. threaten to destroy the peace of soeietv if not the Union itself. The New York Express, says the Baltimore Sun, in relenin.' to the conduct of the alx.lil iiHiisis in Syracuse. i n the occasion of the late riot, says that it n. w lieirins ! M be time to agitate another question, ami that is, the "clunt lmf 7 Vr f ' free istatee. as Irulinna has hIiphiIv done. II every runanraj negro is lo b.ing with him a Syracuse Bglit, the Express demand- that they forbid negroes l.y law front eMBSaa ' N -w York. They have in that Stste already ; prohibited them from voting unless they lme a large ; properly qualification, and. no doubt. Urft the Express, j a majiiy to prohibit their entry tit re could be got just as large us that which prohibited them from voting, . Wc cannot afford to make the free States a haule-ground ; for runaway negroes. Such suggestions as these are of (rave import to tbe colored people every, here, to those , V the slave Stales as well as others, and would seem to i ' .'bat colonization is the lest thing for them to look to .! -.ntely for self-preservaiion. We are glad to see that in New Yotk and other quarters they are heyinning te realize this thing for themselves. Mt. Vernun (U ) Banner. From the Rurlington fVt.J Daily Sentinel, Oct. SO. The Mornl of tbe Election. The result of the recent elections, b"th at tbe Norlh and South, has clearly pioved that no men or party whose attachment to the Union is not clearly defined and anequivocal'y expressed can long enjoy the confidence of any considerable portion of the people of the L nited States. Tue peafisf have no svmpntl.y fr disI onion, in whatever fmm it mar mcpi,? ii.-lt What. ev,.r mav Ue said by the opponents of republican insti. ... . i ' . ... ... tuiion aoout tneo inger ol trusting to the puitiic senti. ment of any community, the evtwrience of our own r-ountrv is everv dav proving to tbe world that the uVli. berate judoment of a virtuous and enlivened people can be reiied on. Their sober second thought is almost invariably right. Tho people of the United States have passed their iii, lament noon the aitntors of the North and the disj unioni sis of the South Disunion and nullification, 1 though fostered by local piejudicf and sectional intercsts, hnvc been signally defeated whenever they have i leen brought lefore the people. They are effectually gres. The Presidency. A correspondent of tbe Philadelphia Jfational Argus, writing from this city, ny: S'-nator Douglas is announced to speak here on Tu-dv night. The crllaut little Senator bits many admirers here and his name rallies wme friends in con. nection with the Presidency. The Cm decided disposition to rally upon Doul Buchanan and C The Cass men manifest a rlas. This State, Css, the former o)- w,jc., j paining ground very rapidly. He is the strongest man who could be nominated, so far a. tbi. State is concerned." Senator Douglas is a great little fe!l w; has made hosts of new fiiendsdurins bis short stay with us; would mnke a brave run for lhe Presidency; and it nominated. u ill find n wit h him heart nnd soul. So would " Old B-ick, or any other National moorat But the writer is miMaken when nc says Mr. Bucha, h troncg, mR that could be ncminated, as far ns this State is concerned. Gen. Cass has the werm, a mm ans M T mm I a m Wat a lhe strong sympathies of 'hosts of onr working men in hi favor, who admire him for his great mind, which has led him from the bench of the mechanic to a prominent seat in the Senate of tbe Unitml State. Gen. Butler, the scholar, soldier, and defender of Jackson, is also a strong man with ns. Our people love the man. and would come up in solid phalanx to his support. Either of these gentlemen are at least as strong in our State aa Mr. Buchanan. Baltimore Argus. tirt.love ol Ihe Lemcraev oi our omir. " "Got awt Change? ' Oi Friday mo-ning last, a hild evident ally fell from steamer Maid of Erin lying at . T I 1.1 I. -.... I.aam ,lr.nil ll .l . uhir in p.Hkr nori . unci wtiuui na ' w. ... . .-- - r . . . - I I . .1 ....... ... n .. I ..riH L . "?f. gen. -eman standing jr-W ZZSTJaJ Z t It -uoi any cnnsre Coi mm, .' a ' - father of the child, afte. ww. J. T"" i v.. I.r.i.n. n with rreat snxieiy nerieteo on ui nf 1 1 "tniniri e, n at ' ------ f - . . A(tAr j.ill in his hnd. ' Got ny ehangef Iwa-t to awt tht man a datlmr far Mg e Us of my kH4